The Somali Patronage System Has Taken Hold Of Minnesota Politics

Chad Davis, CC BY 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
American Liberty News
- June 9, 2026
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Former Border Patrol Chief Greg Bovino is considering a run for the White House in 2028.

Bovino, who retired from the Border Patrol in March after a three-decade career, confirmed this week that a presidential bid is under consideration. Though he retired, he has alluded to being forced out by the Administration in interviews. Speaking to NewsNation on Monday, he described the effort as exploratory but indicated he could formally launch a campaign if the pieces fall into place.

“If it all comes together,” Bovino said, he would consider entering the.

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The United States has long comforted itself with a story about immigration. People arrive poor and traumatized, they struggle, and over time, they assimilate. Languages fade, loyalties widen, and civic norms take root. That story has been true often enough to feel like a law of nature. But it is not a law. It is a wager. And in the case of Somali immigration, particularly in Minnesota, the wager is failing in plain sight.

The failure is not mysterious. It has a name, a structure, and a logic. What is routinely described as fraud, mismanagement, or isolated criminal behavior is more accurately understood as the Somali patronage system. This is not a rhetorical invention. It is the standard term in academic and policy literature for a deeply entrenched social and political order organized around clans, subclans, and binding kinship obligations. It predates the modern Somali state by centuries and survived because it had to. In Somalia, it replaced the state. In the West, it is colonizing one.

The system arose in conditions of chronic insecurity. When there is no reliable government, survival depends on who you know and who owes you. The clan, or qabiil, became the primary unit of power. It was identity, insurance, enforcement, and politics rolled into one. Loyalty moved inward, never outward. The individual served the family, the family served the sub clan, the sub clan served the clan. The state was, at best, incidental.

From this foundation emerged patron-client relationships that still define Somali social life. Patrons distribute resources. Clients deliver loyalty. The resources can be jobs, contracts, welfare access, legal help, protection from scrutiny, or migration pathways. The loyalty takes the form of votes, silence, coordinated narratives, and the steady recruitment of relatives into the same pipelines. Within the system, this is not corruption. It is duty. A Somali officeholder who refuses to favor kin is not praised as ethical. He is condemned as disloyal.

This is why the system is so durable. Power is rarely exercised directly. It flows through elders, religious figures, nonprofit executives, business owners, and community brokers who translate public resources into private advantage. These intermediaries decide who eats and who starves, who advances and who is frozen out. When scrutiny appears, they close ranks. Stories are aligned. Witnesses disappear. Institutions stall.

Inside Somalia, the consequences are catastrophic. Somalia is not merely corrupt. It is the most corrupt nation on earth. Transparency International scores countries on a 0 to 100 scale, where 0 is highly corrupt, and 100 is very clean. Somalia scores 9. That ranking places it 179 out of 180 countries, second only to South Sudan. Somalia has lived at or near the bottom of this index since the mid-2000s. This is not a temporary failure. It is a systemic outcome of clan-based governance.

A system that treats public office as a spoil to be captured will always dissolve the distinction between public and private. Oversight becomes hostility. Law becomes negotiation. Enforcement becomes betrayal. Eventually, the idea of a neutral state disappears entirely.

Beginning in the early 1990s, Somalis arrived in the U.S. as refugees fleeing that collapse. Minnesota became the primary destination. Thirty years later, the community is no longer new. There are Somali Americans whose parents and grandparents were born in the U.S. Time has been abundant. Assimilation has not followed.

Instead, the patronage system has entrenched itself. Over decades, Somali networks have expanded into welfare programs, nonprofit ecosystems, school systems, municipal governments, and state agencies. Representation has grown, but neutrality has not. Public office has too often functioned as a pipeline for clan advantage rather than as a bridge into shared civic norms.

The financial cost is staggering. Minnesota has experienced repeated waves of large-scale fraud tied to Somali-run organizations across food programs, childcare subsidies, Medicaid, housing assistance, and nonprofit grant systems. Cumulative estimates of confirmed losses and credible allegations now reach into the billions. Critics have noted, with bitter irony, that the scale of Somali-linked fraud in Minnesota alone is argued to rival or even exceed the entire annual GDP of Somalia itself. Whether one accepts that precise comparison or not, the underlying point is undeniable. A refugee population has generated losses on a scale normally associated with failed states, not American counties.

This is not incidental misconduct. It is the patronage system operating exactly as designed. Large welfare states generate predictable cash flows. Fragmented bureaucracies create blind spots. Language barriers slow audits. Cultural deference paralyzes enforcement. When one operation is shut down, another opens under a new name, a new board, and the same people. Money moves through layered nonprofits, shell entities, and informal remittance networks. Accountability evaporates.

Crucially, the system does not require that all patrons be Somali. It requires only that patrons be paid. Non-Somali politicians learn quickly. They adopt the language, symbolism, and rituals of the community. They attend the right events. They avoid uncomfortable questions. In return, they receive votes, campaign muscle and money, and insulation from accusations of racism or Islamophobia. Investigations stall. Prosecutors hesitate. Regulators retreat. The system expands.

Enforcement inside the community requires little violence. Social pressure suffices. Those who break ranks are shamed, isolated, economically cut off, or branded traitors. Whistleblowers lose family support and community standing. As a result, internal dissent is rare, and external investigators struggle to flip witnesses. The system polices itself.

This is why the clash with Western high-trust societies is so severe. Western governance assumes individual responsibility, impersonal institutions, and rule-based enforcement. The Somali patronage system assumes collective obligation, loyalty over law, and negotiated outcomes. When these assumptions collide, the clan system wins by speed and cohesion. Bureaucracies built for good faith compliance are no match for disciplined kin networks optimized for extraction.

High-trust societies are uniquely vulnerable. Generous welfare programs depend on honesty. They are designed for citizens who feel moral restraint. When those programs are treated as spoils to be captured, the damage spreads quickly. Budgets strain. Public trust collapses. Legitimate beneficiaries suffer backlash. Social cohesion erodes.

Europe offers the same warning. Across Scandinavia, Somali communities exhibit chronically low employment, high welfare dependency, and persistent segregation. Second-generation outcomes often worsen rather than improve. Parallel societies harden. The patronage system reproduces itself with alarming efficiency.

The final accelerant is what can only be called suicidal empathy, and Minnesota supplies a concrete illustration. Three female, white, liberal judges have repeatedly refused to hold Somali fraudsters accountable even when the evidence is overwhelming. Consider Abdifatah Yusuf. Prosecutors proved that he stole millions from Medicaid to finance luxury cars, jewelry, designer clothes, and travel. A jury unanimously convicted him. Judge Sarah West then vacated the verdict. In two related prosecutions, separate judges dismissed the cases against Yusuf’s wife and his brother. The result is stark. $7.2M vanished, no prison sentences followed, and no meaningful accountability materialized. This pattern is not isolated. Variations of it repeat across Minnesota, again and again, as cases are delayed, dismissed, or quietly unraveled.

Audits are softened, questions are avoided, journalists self-censor, and politicians look away. Courts that should enforce the law instead signal indulgence. Recent reporting underscores the pattern. Independent journalist Nick Shirley uncovered multiple Somali-run childcare centers claiming millions in public funds despite having few or no enrolled students at all. The fraud was basic, brazen, and documentable. Yet much of the legacy media response was not to investigate the criminal schemes he exposed but to attack the reporter himself, labeling him far right or bigoted while ignoring the underlying theft. This inversion is now routine. Scrutiny is redirected from criminals to critics, and accountability is replaced by character assassination. Billions are lost because confronting the truth feels impolite, and because suicidal empathy has displaced equal justice under law.

This is not a claim that every Somali immigrant is corrupt. It is a claim that systems matter more than intentions, and Minnesota’s childcare fraud illustrates why. In 2018, the State of Minnesota raided ten Somali-run childcare centers, including the Baraka Childcare Center, after investigators found inflated enrollment and fabricated attendance used to bill the public for millions. The raids were widely covered. What followed was silence. Prosecutions evaporated. The patronage system engaged. The operators were allowed to walk free, their centers formally closed, and new childcare facilities reopened in the same locations under new names, with new straw owners, and the same underlying networks. Scrutiny did not follow the money. Fraud resumed under fresh letterhead. A centuries-old social operating system built for stateless survival does not dissolve when dropped into a modern welfare state. Absent firm enforcement, it metastasizes.

The danger is not hypothetical. It is measurable, cumulative, and accelerating. A low-trust system embedded inside a high-trust society will not converge upward. It will drag institutions down. If the West wishes to remain generous, it must also be serious. That seriousness begins with a hard pause. The U.S., in particular, should halt further Somali immigration until it demonstrates the capacity to dismantle the patronage system already operating inside its borders and to assimilate those already here into Western civic norms. Continuing inflows without institutional correction only deepen capture, expand losses, and reward non-assimilation. Naming the problem is necessary but insufficient. Enforcement must be real, oversight relentless, and immigration policy aligned with outcomes rather than intentions. Compassion without boundaries is not virtue. It is surrender.

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4 Comments
    SteveKirkish

    Didn’t we deal with this during the Boss years where the Democrats who ran large industrial cities bought votes from the new immigrants. They used government money and power to get people hired and put into power positions. Same game, new faces but now the fraudsters hate America.

    Nunya

    Send the corrupt ones back via jail and there might be some examples made to make anyone else think twice before trying it again. At least part of the behavior has been learned from a certain political entity here in the US.

    pj_colorado

    Solution? Get them out, all of them, and there will be no conflict, reason for conflict, and/or no issues! If you’re “Somali,” you belong in Somalia. If you want to be here in America, you become an American, a genuine, western culture American, and you discard your Somali culture! Learn the language, learn the civics of our nation and government, assimilate into OUR WESTERN CULTURE, obey our laws, and then enjoy the gift of American residency (it’s a privilege, not a right)!

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